A cloud containing ruthenium at nearly 1,000 times normal levels has been measured in the Ural mountains

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Russia's meteorological service has revealed it had measured pollution of a radioactive isotope at nearly 1,000 times normal levels in the Ural mountains.

The announcement is the first official Russian data supporting reports that a nuclear accident has taken place.

The data appears to back up a report by the French nuclear safety institute IRSN, which said on November 9 that a cloud of radioactive pollution over Europe had indicated some kind of leak had taken place at a nuclear facility either in Russia or Kazakhstan in the last week of September.

Neither Russia nor Kazakhstan has acknowledged any accident.

The levels of ruthenium at the Novogorny plant were 440 times higher than normal

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Russian state weather service Roshydromet said in a statement it had found "extremely high pollution" of ruthenium 106 in samples from two meteorological stations in the southern Urals region in late September and early October.

At the Agrayash weather station the levels were 986 times those of the previous month, while at the Novogorny station they were 440 times higher.

The weather service did not rule out that the radioactive isotope could be absorbed into the atmosphere and reach Western Europe.

Western scientists said the ruthenium 106 levels disclosed did not by themselves indicate any major health threat, although it was still unclear what had happened.

Malcolm Sperrin, director of the Department of Medical Physics and Clinical Engineering at Oxford University Hospitals, said: "Ruthenium is very rare and hence its presence may suggest that an event of some nature has occurred.

"That being said, the natural abundance is so low that even a factor of 900 up on natural levels is still very low."

Professor Paddy Regan at the University of Surrey said the fact that the ruthenium was found in isolation, rather than with other radioactive materials "suggests a leak from a fuel/reprocessing plant or somewhere they are separating the ruthenium" rather than a bigger nuclear accident.

Professor Malcolm Sperrin said ruthenium is very rare and an accident must have taken place given the levels measured

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"If it was a reactor leak or nuclear explosion, other radioisotopes would also be present in the plum' and from the reports, they are not," Regan said.

Russia's Consumer Rights Protection service said in a statement that the ruthenium 106 posed no threat to public health.

Andrey Vazhenin, the main oncology specialist of the Chelyabinsk region where the two weather stations are located, was quoted by Interfax news agency as saying people had nothing no worry about.

Still, some researchers called for a more complete investigation. Bruno Chareyron, head of independent French nuclear laboratory CRIIRAD, called on the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency to order an inspection and impose protective measures.

"It is deplorable that 31 years after Chernobyl we again remain completely in the dark about what has happened," Chareyron said.

The Agrayash weather station is located about 20 miles from Mayak, a huge plant that reprocesses nuclear fuel and produces radioactive material for industrial and research purposes, owned by Russian state nuclear company Rosatom.

The accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power station in 1986 sent radioactive material all over Europe (Image: Press Association)

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In a statement, Mayak denied that its plant was the source of increased level of ruthenium 106. Rosatom said there were no accidents at any of its facilities which could increase the level of ruthenium 106 in the atmosphere.

Greenpeace said in a statement that it would ask Russia's prosecutors' office to investigate whether there had been an accident in the area.

The Institute of Nuclear Physics in Kazakhstan, which neighbours the southern Urals, has said there were no accidents at its scientific research reactor and no ruthenium 106 at its two disused testing areas in western Kazakhstan.